A preliminary experimental test of the crossed influences between the valence of collective memory and collective future thinking

Memory. 2024 Feb;32(2):129-142. doi: 10.1080/09658211.2024.2314983. Epub 2024 Feb 12.

Abstract

This research experimentally examined the crossed influences between the emotional valence of collective memory and collective future thinking. As remembering the past and imagining the future are shaped by the present, we additionally test whether perceived anomie (i.e., perceiving present society as disintegrated and disregulated) would moderate these influences. Study 1 (N = 228 French participants) manipulated the valence of collective memory (positive vs. negative French past) to test its effect on the valence of collective future thinking. Results showed that the salience of a negative (vs. positive) French past lead to the projection of a more negative French future only among participants who perceived present society as highly disregulated. Study 2 (N = 215) focused on the influence of the valence of collective future thinking (positive vs. negative French future) on the valence associated with the French past. Results showed that the salience of a negative (vs. positive) French future lead left-wing participants to rate more positively events/figures of the French past that are usually valued by conservatives. Taken together, these studies provided evidence of conditional effects in the crossed influences between the emotional valence of collective memory and collective future thinking, thus contributing to the recent literature on collective mental time travel.

Keywords: Collective mental time travel; collective future thinking; collective memory; perceived anomie.

MeSH terms

  • Emotions
  • Forecasting
  • Humans
  • Memory, Episodic*
  • Mental Recall
  • Thinking*
  • Time